TECHNICAL FIELD
[0001] The present invention is related to integrated circuits and other electronic devices
and, in particular, to a mixed-scale interface suitable for densely interconnecting
nanoscale electronics with microscale electronics within an integrated circuit or
other electronic device.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] As manufacturers and designers of integrated circuits continue to relentlessly decrease
the size of integrated-circuit features, such as transistors and signal lines, and
to correspondingly increase the density at which features can be fabricated within
integrated circuits, they are beginning to approach fundamental physical limits to
further decreases in feature sizes for integrated circuits fabricated by conventional
photolithography techniques. Research efforts have, during the past decade, turned
to new, non-photolithography-based techniques for fabricating nanoscale electronics
that allow for fabrication of significantly smaller features than the smallest features
currently fabricated by photolithographic techniques. In one approach to designing
and fabricating nanoscale electronics, nanowire crossbars comprising multiple layers
of parallel nanowires are fabricated by self-assembly or self-orientation with molecular-scale
widths on surfaces. The grid-like nanowire crossbars provide a two-dimensional array
of nanowire junctions at the closest points of contact between nanowires of a first
layer, oriented in a first direction, and nanowires of a second layer, oriented in
a second direction approximately perpendicular to the first direction. The nanowire
junctions, comprising a small number of molecules of a nanonwire-junction substance,
can be fabricated to have properties of resistors, diodes, transistors, and other
familiar components of conventional electronic circuits.
[0003] Many different prototype nanoscale electronic circuits have been produced in research
and development environments, and continued research efforts are producing palettes
of nanoscale-electronic components and features of increasing sizes, a rich variety
of useful nanoscale-electronic component organizations, and a variety of fabrication
methods for producing nanoscale electronic components and devices. However, practical,
commercial electronic devices need to include large scale, microscale, and submicroscale
components and circuits that interface to nanoscale electronic devices and circuitry.
In many cases, devising reliable and cost-effective interfaces between microscale
and submicroscale electronics and nanoscale electronics has proven to be more difficult
than the design and fabrication of nanoscale electronic devices.
[0004] One approach to interfacing microscale and submicroscale electronics to nanoscale
electronics involves the use of microscale-to-nanoscale demultiplexers. Figure 1 illustrates
an exemplary demultiplexer/nanowire-crossbar configuration that allows individual
nanowire junctions within a nanowire crossbar to be accessed by address signals input
to microscale signal lines. As shown in Figure 1, a first demultiplexer 102 interconnects
a small number of microscale address signal lines 104 to a much larger number of parallel
nanowires 106 within a nanowire crossbar 108. A second demultiplexer 110 interconnects
a second set of microscale address signal lines 112 to a second set of parallel nanowires
114 within the nanowire crossbar 108. Various nanowire junctions may be configured
to have particular electronic properties, including properties characteristic of transistors,
resistors, diodes, and other such electronic components, represented in Figure 1 with
filled circles, such as filled circle 116, overlying particular nanowire junctions.
In the exemplary microscale/nanoscale interface shown in Figure 1, the four address
lines (e.g. address lines 104) input to the demultiplexer can carry any of 2
4 or 16 different digital patterns, or addresses, of high and low voltage or current
binary signals on each address line. The demultiplexer can translate each different
perceived address into a pattern of high and low signals output to the nanowires to
which it is connected. Typically, a demultiplexer outputs a high, or Boolean "1,"
signal to a single nanowire corresponding to a four-bit nanowire address received
through the microscale address signal lines, and low, or Boolean "0" signals to the
remaining, non-addressed nanowires. By arranging the demultiplexers, as shown in Figure
1, each nanowire junction within the nanowire crossbar can be individually addressed
by a pair of addresses, one address received on the first set of address signal lines
104 and a second address received on the second set of address signal lines 112. The
nanowire crossbar can be configured arbitrarily to implement any of a large number
of different possible circuits which output result signals to selected nanowires.
The nanowire crossbar in Figure 1 is exemplary of the overall organization, and is
not intended to represent any particular circuit or device.
[0005] Working prototypes of demultiplexer-based microscale/nanoscale interfaces have been
developed, and the demultiplexer-based microscale/nanoscale interface has been shown
to be a feasible and effective nanoscale/microscale interface technique. However,
in general, addressing of a single nanowire by each multiplexer at each instant in
time represents a significant bandwidth constriction since, as shown in the example
shown in Figure 1, only one junction may be addressed at a time. Demultiplexer-based
nanoscale/microscale interfaces may therefore represent significant bandwidth bottlenecks
within mixed-scale microelectronic devices. The demultiplexer-based approach may additionally
add design and fabrication overheads, cost, and reliability problems to mixed-scale
electronic devices with densely interconnected microscale and nanoscale circuits and
functional modules. Therefore, researchers and developers of mixed-scale electronic
devices continue to seek more reliable, more easily fabricated, and less bandwidth-constricting
nanoscale/microscale interfaces for use in mixed-scale electronic devices.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0006] Embodiments of the present invention are directed to mixed-scale electronic interfaces,
included in integrated circuits and other electronic devices, that provide for dense
electrical interconnection between microscale features of a predominantly microscale
or submicroscale layer and nanoscale features of a predominantly nanoscale layer.
The predominantly nanoscale layer, in one embodiment of the present invention, comprises
a tessellated pattern of submicroscale or microscale pads densely interconnected by
nanowire junctions between sets of parallel, closely spaced nanowire bundles. The
predominantly submicroscale or microscale layer includes pins positioned complementarily
to the submicroscale or microscale pads in the predominantly nanoscale layer. More
complex mixed-scale electronic interfaces that include two or more microscale or submicroscale
layers and/or two or more nanoscale layers can also be designed and fabricated according
to methods of the present invention.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0007]
Figure 1 illustrates an exemplary demultiplexer/nanowire-crossbar configuration that
allows individual nanowire junctions within a nanowire crossbar to be accessed by
address signals input to microscale signal lines.
Figure 2 illustrates a single pin/pad interface within a two-layer nanoscale/macroscale-interface
embodiment of the present invention.
Figure 3 illustrates, in the same fashion as Figure 2, two pin/pad interfaces interconnected
by a nanowire junction within a nanoscale/microscale-interface embodiment of the present
invention.
Figures 4A-D illustrate the overall organization and patterning of one class of two-layer
nanoscale/macroscale-interface embodiments of the present invention.
Figure 5 illustrates the first-nanoscale-sub-layer pads electrically connected, through
a single nanowire junction, to one particular second-nanoscale-sub-layer pad in the
tessellated, predominantly nanoscale layer of a two-layer nanoscale/microscale interface-embodiment
of the present invention shown in Figure 4D.
Figure 6 illustrates four symmetry-related arrangements of a first-nanoscale-sub-layer
pad with a second-nanoscale-sub-layer pad within a tessellated, predominantly nanoscale
layer of a two-layer nanoscalelmicroscale-interface embodiment of the present invention.
Figures 7A-T illustrate one method for fabricating a two-layer nanoscale/microscale-interface
embodiment of the present invention, the method constituting an additional embodiment
of the present invention.
Figure 8 shows a rectilinear grid of square microscale cells, each cell containing
two different microscale pins.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0008] Embodiments of the present invention are directed to nanoscale/microscale interfaces
that permit dense interconnections between microscale and submicroscale features and
logic and nanoscale features and logic within an integrated circuit or other electronic
device. In the current discussion, the term "nanoscale" refers to features and components
with a least one dimension smaller than 100 nanometers. Alternatively, the term "nanoscale"
may refer to features and components with at least one dimension smaller than 50 nanometers,
and, in certain cases, less than 10 nanometers. The term "submicroscale" generally
refers to features and components with at least on dimension smaller than 1 micron,
and the term "microscale" refers to features and components with dimensions equal
to, or greater than, 1 micron. In general, microscale and submicroscale features and
components can be fabricated by conventional photolithographic techniques, but nanoscale
components and features can generally be fabricated, currently, using nanoimprint
techniques or other non-photolithographic techniques. A described nanoscale/microscale-interface
embodiment of the present invention interconnects pads in a predominantly nanoscale
layer with correspondingly regularly patterned microscale or submicroscale pins in
a predominantly submicroscale or microscale layer. Each pad in the predominantly nanoscale
layer may be interconnected through nanowire-junctions with a large number of neighboring
pads through nanowire junctions in lattice-like channels of nanowires. A pad within
the predominantly nanoscale layer can be accessed by conventional submicroscale or
microscale electronics in the second, predominantly microscale or submicroscale layer
via a submicroscale or microscale pin.
[0009] Figure 2 illustrates a single pin/pad interface within a two-layer nanoscale/macroscale-interface
embodiment of the present invention. As shown in Figure 2, a submicroscale or microscale
pin 202 connects to a submicroscale or microscale signal line 204. The pin 202 and
signal line 204 are both embedded within the predominantly submicroscale or microscale
layer of the two-layer nanoscale/microscale-interface embodiment of the present invention.
The pin 202 also electrically contacts a pad 206 that is, in turn, interconnected
with a first nanowire 208 and a second nanowire 210. The pad 206 and attached nanowires
208 and 210 together compose a pad-interconnected-nanowire unit ("PINU") of one sub-layer
of the predominantly nanoscale layer of the two-layer nanoscale/macroscale-interface
embodiment of the present invention.
[0010] Figure 3 illustrates, in the same fashion as Figure 2, two pad/pin interfaces within
a nanoscale/macroscale-interface embodiment of the present invention. In Figure 3,
a first microscale or submicroscale signal line 302 electrically contacts a first
pin 304. The first pin also electrically contacts the pad 306 of a first PINU 307.
The first PINU 307 resides in a first sub-layer of the predominantly nanoscale layer
of the nanoscale/macroscale interface. A second submicroscale or microscale signal
line 308 electrically contacts a second pin 310. The second pin also electrically
contacts the pad 312 of a second PINU 313. The second PINU 313 resides within a second
sub-layer of the predominantly nanoscale layer of the two-layer nanoscale/macroscale
interface. Two nanowires 314 and 316 of the two PINUs 307 and 313 intersect at a nanowire
junction 318, which, like the nanowire junctions in nanowire crossbars, may comprise
one or a small number of molecules that implement a passive or active nanoscale electrical
component, such as a resistor, a variable-resistance resistor, a diode, a transistor,
or other passive or active component.
[0011] In many embodiments of the present invention, pairs of pins of the predominantly
microscale layer of a two-layer nanoscale/microscale interface are electrically interconnected
via a pair of PINUs and a single nanowire junction. In certain types of electronic
devices that incorporate two-layer nanoscale/macroscale interfaces of the present
invention, including mixed-scale integrated circuits, the predominantly microscale
and submicroscale layer may implement various types of logic and functional units,
and the predominantly nanoscale layer may serve primarily to interconnect the various
submicroscale or microscale components and logic. By using nanoscale electronics for
component and logic interconnection, the area and power consumption of a mixed-scale
integrated circuit or other electronic device can both be significantly decreased.
[0012] Figures 4A-D illustrate the overall organization and patterning of one class of two-layer
nanoscale/macroscale-interface embodiments of the present invention. As shown in Figure
4A, the predominantly submicroscale or microscale layer of the two-layer nanoscale/microscale
interface can be considered to be organized into square or rectangular cells to form
a rectilinear grid of microscale cells. Figure 4A shows a tiny portion of the predominantly
microscale layer of a two-layer nanoscale/macroscale interface that includes 30 microscale
cells, such as microscale cell 402. The rectilinear organization of the predominantly
microscale layer reflects only the arrangements of submicroscale or microscale pins
within the predominantly microscale layer. The underlying submicroscale or microscale
circuitry and components may not be so regularly patterned and may not otherwise conform
to the rectilinear pattern illustrated in Figure 4A. In general, each microscale cell
contains a small number of submicroscale or microscale pins that are identically arranged
and positioned in each microscale cell of the rectilinear grid. In subsequent figures,
two-pin cells are illustrated. In various prototype designs of functional devices,
four-pin microscale cells are employed. Because the pins are identically arranged
in each microscale cell, the pins also form a regular pattern across the surface of
the predominantly microscale layer.
[0013] Figure 4B shows the organization of pad-interconnected-nanowire units ("PINUs") within
a small portion of a first sub-layer of the predominantly nanoscale layer of a two-layer
nanoscale/macroscale-interface embodiment of the present invention. The PINUs are
arranged so that the centers of the pads of the PINUs fall on linear columns and rows.
In Figure 4B, a horizontal dashed line 402 is drawn through the centers of pads in
one row, and a vertical dashed line 404 is drawn through the centers of a column of
pads. The PINUs, including both the pad-portion and nanowire-portions of each PINU,
are rotated by a small angle θ (406 in Figure 4B) with respect to the row direction.
Rotation of the PINUs allows nanowires of the PINUs to form closely spaced nanowire
bundles, such as closely spaced nanowire bundle 408 in Figure 4B, oriented at the
small angle θ with respect to the row direction. In the described embodiments of the
two-layer nanoscale/macroscale interface, the rows and columns that define the center
of the PINUs form a rectilinear grid with square cells, although, in alternative embodiments,
the columns need not be perpendicular to the rows, and the cells may be rhomboid.
In the described embodiments of the present invention, the centers of the pads of
the first nanoscale sub-layer are positioned to directly overlie the centers of approximately
one-half of the pins in the predominantly microscale layer of the two-layer nanoscale/microscale
interface, with the remaining pins centered within each square nanoscale cell of the
first nanoscale sub-layer.
[0014] Figure 4C shows a second nanoscale sub-layer overlaying the first nanoscale sub-layer
shown in Figure 4B to form a small portion of the tessellated, predominately nanoscale
layer of a two-layer nanoscale/macroscale-interface embodiment of the present invention.
In the described embodiments of the present invention, the second nanoscale sub-layer
is identical in organization to the first nanoscale sub-layer, but is rotated 90 degrees
with respect to the first nanoscale sub-layer and translated, by 1/√2 times the pad-repeat
distance along columns and rows of the first nanoscale sub-layer, in a diagonal direction,
so that the pads of the second nanoscale sub-layer are located at the centers of the
cells formed by the pads of the first nanoscale sub-layer and so that each second-sub-layer
pad is, in the case of square cells, equidistant from the nearest surrounding pads
of the first nanoscale sub-layer. In this organization, the nanowires of the second
nanoscale sub-layer form parallel, closely spaced bundles, such as parallel, closely
spaced bundle 410, perpendicular to the parallel, closely spaced bundles of nanowires
of the first nanoscale sub-layer. In the predominantly nanoscale layer shown in Figure
4C, each of the two nanowires of each PINU has a length equal to approximately three
times the repeat distance of pads in the column and row directions of the nanoscale
sub-layer that contains the PINU. For example, nanowire 412 emanating from pad 414
of the second nanoscale sub-layer spans pads 416-418 of the first nanoscale sub-layer,
which have pad-repeat distances equal to those in the second nanoscale sub-layer.
In alternative embodiments, the nanowires may have much greater lengths with respect
to the pad repeat distance, as long as a nanowire in one layer is not positioned so
closely to a pin or pad in the other layer that there is an undesired electrical interaction
between the two. The longer the nanowires, the more nanowires that may be present
in each parallel, closely spaced bundle of nanowires. Pad 414 is representative of
the vast majority of pads within a large, predominantly nanoscale layer of the illustrated
two-layer nanoscale/microscale interface, and is surrounded by two vertical and two
horizontal channels, each comprising parallel, closely spaced bundles having a three-nanowire
width, which separate pad 414 from its four nearest neighbor pads 420-423 in the first
nanoscale sub-layer.
[0015] Figure 4D illustrates, in a fashion similar to Figures 4B and 4C, a tessellated,
predominantly nanoscale layer of a two-layer nanoscale/microscale-interface embodiment
of the present invention in which each of the two nanowires of each PINU have a length
equal to approximately four times the repeat distance of the pads within the nanoscale
sub-layer that contains the PINU. While, in Figure 4C, the parallel, closely spaced
bundles of nanowires each includes, at each point, three separate nanowires, in the
parallel, closely spaced bundles of nanowires in Figure 4D each includes, at each
point, up to four nanowires. Each channel is actually composed of many different nanowires,
since channels span the entire, or a large portion of the, predominantly nanoscale
layer, while individual nanowires are generally much shorter. Thus, the length of
the nanowires of each PINU determine the width, in nanowires, of the parallel, closely
spaced bundles of nanowires, or channels, within the tessellated, predominantly nanoscale
layer. In Figure 4D, the darkly colored pads, such as pad 426, lie in a first nanoscale
sub-layer, and the lighter shaded pads, such as pad 428, lie in a second nanoscale
sub-layer.
[0016] Figure 5 illustrates the first-nanoscale-sub-layer pads potentially electrically
connected, through a single nanowire junction, to one particular second-nanoscale-sub-layer
pad in the tessellated, predominantly nanoscale layer of a two-layer nanoscale/microscale
interface-embodiment of the present invention shown in Figure 4D. As discussed above,
the nanowires 501 and 502 emanating from the particular second-nanoscale-sub-layer
pad 506 each span four pad-repeat distances. Each of the two nanowires 501 and 502
therefore cross over, and form nanowire junctions, with the four nanowires in eight
different channels. For example, nanowire 502 forms nanowire junctions with each of
the four nanowires in channels 508-515. Each nanowire junction potentially connects,
depending on the nature of the nanowire junction, the nanowire with a first-nanoscale-layer
PINU. The particular second-nanoscale-sub-layer pad 506 may be electrically interconnected
with the 64 first-nanoscale-level pads, such as first-nanoscale-sub-layer pad 516,
shown in Figure 5, and numbered 1-64. A single pin of the predominantly microscale
or submicroscale layer of the two-layer nanoscale/microscale interface may therefore
be connected, in the embodiment illustrated in Figure 4D, to each of up to 64 neighboring
pins by two PINUs and a single intervening nanowire junction. When the length of the
nanowires increases, the number of nanowires in each channel increases, the number
of channels spanned by a PINU increases, and the number of pads or pins interconnected
through a single nanowire junction geometrically increases. For example, in a nanoscale
layer of a nanoscale/microscale-interface embodiment of the present invention in which
each nanowire of a PINU spans ten pad-repeat distances, a given pad or pin may be
electrically interconnected, through single nanowire junctions, with up to 400 neighboring
pins or pads.
[0017] There are an almost limitless number of different configurations of a tessellated,
predominantly nanoscale layer that may be used in a two-layer nanoscale/microscale
interface according to the present invention. As discussed above, pad-repeat distances
may vary, angles between rows and columns of pads may depart from 90°, and pad-cornered
cells of the tessellated, predominantly nanoscale layer may be, in addition to squares
and rectangles, diamond shaped or rhomboid in nature. Furthermore, for any given arrangement
of PINUs, there are a number of other symmetry-related arrangements with equivalent
pad spacings and column and row orientations. Figure 6 illustrates four symmetry-related
arrangements 602, 604, 606, and 608 of a first-nanoscale-sub-layer pad and a second-nanoscale-sub-layer
pad within a tessellated, predominantly nanoscale layer of a two-layer nanoscale/microscale-interface
embodiment of the present invention. In three-dimensional networks of PINUs and other
features and components within multiple nanoscale sub-layers, a much larger number
of symmetry related arrangements for any given arrangement may be possible.
[0018] Figures 7A-T illustrate one method for fabricating a two-layer nanoscale/microscale-interface
embodiment of the present invention, the method constituting an additional embodiment
of the present invention. As shown in Figure 7A, the process begins with a substrate
consisting of, or including, a predominantly microscale layer 702 with a regular arrangement
of microscale or submicroscale pins 704 and 706 at the surface of the substrate. The
pins may be composed of a variety of conductive materials, including conductive polymers,
metal elements or alloys, or conductive and doped silicon or gallium arsenide, and
may be embedded in a variety of different substrate materials, including silicon dioxide.
The predominantly microscale layer 702 includes further submicroscale or microscale
components, signal lines, and other features 704 that implement various functional
components and logic elements of an electronic device. The predominantly microscale
layer is fabricated using conventional photolithographic methods.
[0019] Next, as shown in Figure 7B, a layer of nanoimprint resist 708, such as solvated
poly-methyl-methacrylate ("PMMA") or poly-benzyl-methacrylate ("PBMA") dissolved in
benzyl-methacrylate, is deposited above the predominantly microscale layer. Then,
as shown in Figure 7C, the nanoimprint resist may be cured and then imprinted by a
nanoimprinting technique to form troughs 710-712 and basins 714 corresponding to first-nanoscale-sub-layer
nanowires and pads, respectively. Nanoimprinting techniques generally employ nanoimprinting
stamps prepared from masters fabricated by painstaking, electron-beam-based techniques.
The nanoimprinted nascent nanoscale/microscale interface may be briefly exposed to
a nanoimprint-resist etchant to remove nanoimprint resist from the floors of the nanoimprinted
troughs and basins.
[0020] Next, as shown in Figure 7D, a conductive layer 716 is deposited above the nanoimprint
resist to form first-nanoscale-sub-layer PINUs. In one embodiment of the present invention,
platinum is used for PINUs. Unwanted portions of the deposited, conductive layer and
underlying nanoimprint resist may be subsequently removed by a lift-off process to
produce well-formed, conductive PINUs, as shown in Figure 7F. Alternatively, a two-step
process may be used to first remove unwanted conductive material, as shown in Figure
7E, and to then remove nanoimprint resist. Any remaining nanoimprint resist may be
removed by exposing the nascent two-layer nanoscale/microscale interface to a nanoimprint-resist
etchant. At this point, the first-nanoscale-sub-layer PINUs 718-720 are fully fabricated.
[0021] Next as shown in Figure 7G, a layer 730 of a dielectric material with a low dielectric
constant k, such as SiO
2, is deposited over the first-nanoscale-sub-layer. This dielectric layer may be polished
by a chemical/mechanical polishing step. Then, as shown in Figure 7H, a nanoimprint
resist layer 732 is applied. Then, as shown in Figure 7l, basins 734 are imprinted,
in a second nanoimprinting step, over microscale-layer pads that are not yet overlain
with nanoscale PINU pads. As shown in Figure 7J, an etching step may then be performed
to etch through the SiO
2 layer to expose the microscale-layer pad underlying the nanoimprinted basins. As
shown in Figure 7K, a conductive layer 736 is next applied, and a liftoff process
or two-step nanoimprint/conductive-layer removal process can then be used to produce
a modified, first-nanoscale-sub-layer with conductive pillars, or vias 738, that rise
up from the underlying microscale-layer pads to the surface of the modified, first-nanoscale-sub-layer.
[0022] As shown in Figure 7M, nanowire-junction material 740 is next deposited on the surface
of the nascent two-layer nanoscale/microscale interface. The nanowire-junction material
may be, in certain embodiments, a variably resistive material that can reversibly
transition between a relatively high conductivity state and a relatively low conductivity
state upon application of two different voltages. Such material allows nanowire junctions
to be configured electronically to either electrically interconnect the two nanowires
that cross at the nanowire junction or to electrically isolate the two nanowires from
one another. In alternative embodiments, alternative types of nanowire-junction materials
may be deposited to produce alternative types of nanowire-junction components. In
certain embodiments, multiple layers may be deposited in order to produce multi-layer
nanowire junctions. Next, as shown in Figure 7N, a thin layer of titanium 742 is deposited
on the surface of the nascent two-layer nanoscale/microscale interface. Following
deposition of the titanium, as shown in Figure 7O, a second layer of nanoimprint resist
744 is deposited on the surface of the nascent two-layer nanoscale/microscale interface
and cured.
[0023] In a third nanoimprinting step, as shown in Figure 7P, the nanoimprint resist is
stamped to produce troughs 747-749 and basins 750 in which second-nanoscale-layer
nanowires and pads are subsequently formed. Then, as shown in Figure 7Q, a second
layer of conductive material 752 is deposited on the surface of the nascent two-layer
nanoscale/microscale interface, the conductive material forming the PINUs of the second
nanoscale sub-layer. In the described embodiment, platinum is again used for the second-sub-layer
PINUs. Unwanted portions of the conductive layer and underlying nanoimprint resist
are then removed by a second lift-off process, as shown in Figure 7R, to produce a
surface with exposed, second-nanoscale-level PINUs lying above a titanium coated surface.
The nascent two-layer nanoscale/microscale interface can be etched to remove all non-PINU
material down to the substrate surface, with nanowire-junction material and titanium
remaining only below the second-nanoscale layer PINUs, where the nanowire-junction
material and titanium layers are shielded from the etching process. This results in
production of the two-layer nanoscale/microscale interface 754 shown in Figure 7S.
As shown in Figure 7T, an additional SiO
2 layer may be applied, and polished, to produce a final two-layer nanoscale/microscale
interface 756. The two-layer nanoscale/microscale interface may be additionally coated
with protective layers or additional device layers, as needed for a particular application.
[0024] The process described above with respect to Figures 7A-T can be continued to form
many additional layers, leading to a three-dimensional network of interconnection
and active and passive nanoscale components spanning multiple nanoscale-sub-layers.
The pad dimensions, nanowire dimensions, and other characteristics and parameters
of the components and features of a given nanoscale sub-layer may be varied, as needed,
to create the proper scale and density of interconnections for the given nanoscale
sub-layer.
[0025] A two-layer nanoscale/microscale interface of the present invention can be characterized
by a number of different parameters. Moreover, various embodiments of the present
invention can be optimized for particular applications by optimizing one or more of
these parameters with respect to various different criteria. One characterizing parameter
is the angle θ by which PINUs are rotated with respect to a linear row of pad centers
within a nanoscale sub-layer. Figure 8 shows a rectilinear grid 802 of square microscale
cells, such as microscale cell 804, each cell containing two different microscale
pins, such as microscale pins 806-807 in microscale cell 804. The rectilinear grid
802 in Figure 8 represents the predominantly microscale layer of a two-layer nanoscale/microscale
interface above which the tessellated, predominantly nanoscale layer is fabricated.
Assuming that the pad of a first-nanoscale-level PINU is to be fabricated above pin
808, the angle θ may be chosen to optimize the two-layer nanoscale/microscale interface.
The numerous arrows emanating from pin 808, such as arrow 810, in Figure 8 represent
a few of the many choices for the angle θ with respect to the direction of the rows
of pins within the rectilinear grid 802. In general, it is desirable to have nanowires
as long as possible, in order to allow for placement of as many nanowires as possible
in each channel. Maximizing the number of nanowires per channel in turn maximizes
the potential connectivity between pins implemented within the predominantly microscale
layer. A characteristic parameter of the two-layer nanoscale/microscale interface
is a minimum distance of separation between a nanowire and any microscale pin other
than the microscale pin on which the pad of the PINU including the nanowire is centered.
[0026] The maximum possible lengths of the nanowires emanating from a PINU positioned over
pin 808 vary with θ. For example, in the direction represented by arrow 812, the nanowire
would need to be relatively short, to avoid coming within a distance less than a minimum
separation distance to any neighboring pin, such as neighboring pin 812. Approach
of a nanowire to a neighboring microscale pin closer than a threshold minimum distance
may result in a short within the predominantly nanoscale layer. In the rectilinear
grid shown in Figure 8, certain values of θ corresponding to the directions represented
by arrows 810, 814, 816, and 818 are clearly more favorable than others, including
those corresponding to the direction represented by arrow 812. The θ angles represented
by arrows 810 and 818 correspond to the most favorable directions. In order to fabricate
PINUs with longest-possible nanowires, one may seek to minimize the angle θ in order
to, as closely as possible, align nanowires with the horizontal rows of pins, as represented
by direction 810 in Figure 8. In alternative embodiments of the present invention,
the angle θ may be selected to be as close as possible to the direction indicated
by arrow 818 in Figure 8.
[0027] In the described embodiments of the present invention, each PINU has equal-length
nanowires. Equal length nanowires are not required, but may be desirable for minimizing
reactive-capacitance delays within the predominantly nanoscale layer for a particular
degree of pin interconnection. The greater symmetry provided by equal-length nanowires
may, in many applications, also facilitate routing of signals between microscale pins.
[0028] Another characteristic parameter for two-layer nanoscale/microscale interfaces of
the present invention is the dimensions of PINU pads. In general, when the area of
the pads is relatively small, a greater fraction of the area of the nanoscale layer
can be devoted to nanowires and nanowire interconnections. Additional parameters include
a minimal distance of separation between nanowires, the width of nanowires, dimensions
of the microscale-layer pins, dimensions of the repeating units, or cells, that define
the interface between the microscale and nanoscale layers, a minimum distance of separation
between nanowires and pins, and parameters that characterize uncertainties and errors
in alignment of the nanoscale layer to the microscale layer and in the positioning
of features within each layer. All of these parameters affect the ultimate density
of interconnection that can be achieved in various nanoscale/microscale-interface
embodiments of the present invention. Certain of these parameters, such as the minimum
separation distances between nanowires and between nanowires and pins and the nanowire
widths may depend on the materials from which the nanoscale/microscale-interface embodiments
of the present invention are fabricated, on the types of logic and interconnections
implemented in the nanoscale layer, on the operational voltage and current levels
within the nanoscale/microscale-interface embodiments, on the processes used to fabricate
the nanoscale/microscale-interface embodiments of the present invention, and other
such conditions, characteristics, and constraints. These various parameters can be
analyzed and adjusted in order to find optimal dimensions, special organizations,
and operational characteristics for particular applications of various different nanoscale/microscale-interface
embodiments of the present invention.
[0029] Many different types of nanowire junctions can be fabricated within the nanoscale
layer of a nanoscale/microscale interface. Bistable junctions can be used as conventional
switches. It is also possible to fabricate nanowire junctions that behave as diodes,
transistors, variable resistors, and that exhibit even more exotic behaviors and characteristics
without analogs in microscale devices. Such a diverse palette of components types
allows for implementation of digital and analog logic in the nanoscale layer, as well
as self-modifying tuning and defect-compensating functionality that provides the nanoscale/microscale
interface with an ability to be configured following manufacture and to configure
itself, over time, to optimize performance and to compensate for defects. A circuit
with sufficient built-in logic may monitor its performance and correctness of operation
in order to work around defects that inevitably arise over time due to environmental
and operational hazards, such as cosmic rays, material degradation, static charges,
and transient voltage pulses.
[0030] As one example, variable-resistor-like nanowire junctions can be used to trim an
integrated circuit. Resistance values for various variable-resistor nanowire junctions
can be selected, for example, to adjust internal voltages to compensate for variances
in other components and features of a circuit above tolerance thresholds that would
otherwise cause the circuit to exhibit undesired behavior and characteristics or to
completely fail. For example, a defective switch may transition from one state to
another between 3 and 4 volts, instead of between 0 volts and 2 volts, resulting in
the switch being stuck in only one state despite input voltages that vary between
0V and 2V, to which the defective switch was designed to respond. By trimming an upstream
variable-resistance nanowire junction to a lower resistance value, the input voltages
to the switch may be adjusted from between 0V and 2V to between 3V and 4V, so that
the switch is appropriately responsive to the input voltages.
[0031] As further examples, configurable nanowire junctions may be used to shunt signals
from a defective logic module to a redundant, equivalent module or to a newly configured,
replacement module, in order to isolate the defective module. Test or monitor logic
within an integrated circuit may, using spare cycles and resource, periodically or
continuously monitor an integrated circuit to detect and compensate for defective
or functionally deteriorating components and features, and to configure replacement
components and features.
[0032] While monitor and repair of an integrated circuit, either as a result of internal
testing and monitoring logic, or as a result of external testing and monitoring components,
including human technician, can increase manufacturing yields and extend the useful
lifetimes of integrated circuits, optimization logic within a mixed-scale-interface
embodiment of the present invention may lead to more highly customized and operationally
efficient integrated circuits, tuned to specific applications, than could be economically
designed and manufactured by volume manufacturing processes. Over time, an integrated
circuit may recognize and optimize operational patterns and heavily used functionality
by reconfiguring itself to more efficiently carry out often repeated tasks, much like
particular software routines may be specifically optimized and tuned beyond initial
encoding produced by compilers from high-level languages. Furthermore, the electronic
devices within which integrated circuits are used may themselves contain defects,
or develop defects or degrade, over time, and a mixed-scale-interface embodiment of
the present invention may reconfigure itself to compensate for such external defects
and inefficiencies, either as a result of feedback provided by external testing and
monitoring functionality, or by application-specific monitoring and testing logic
configured into the mixed-scale interface in a post-manufacturing configuration process.
Nanoscale layers of a mixed-scale interface provide for sufficient redundancy of interconnection
and components, as well as stable, but reconfigurable components and features, to
allow for effective and comprehensive post-manufacturing tuning, adjustment, and reconfiguration
needed for self-modifying defect-compensating and optimization functionalities that
can significantly improve manufacturing yields, application-specific customization,
and useful lifetimes of integrated circuits.
[0033] Although the present invention has been described in terms of a particular embodiment,
it is not intended that the invention be limited to this embodiment. Modifications
within the spirit of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art. For
example, as discussed above, an essentially limitless number of different types of
nanoscale/microscale-interface embodiments of the present invention can be fabricated
using any of many different fabrication methods to produce nanoscale/microscale interfaces
with different characteristics, including different orientation angles of PINUs with
respect to the microscale-cell-grid row directions, different microscale-cell grid
geometries and dimensions, different nanoscale-layer patterns and spacing, different
PINU dimensions, and other such characteristics. In alternative embodiments, 4-nanowire
PINUs may be arranged in a regular, rectilinear array within the predominantly nanoscale
layer of a nanoscale/microscale-interface. In other embodiments, 3-nanowire PINUs
may be arranged in a hexagonal tiling patterns. In still additional embodiments, different
types of PINUs may be combined to create more complex tilings with a variety of different
symmetries.
[0034] The foregoing description, for purposes of explanation, used specific nomenclature
to provide a thorough understanding of the invention. However, it will be apparent
to one skilled in the art that the specific details are not required in order to practice
the invention. The foregoing descriptions of specific embodiments of the present invention
are presented for purpose of illustration and description. They are not intended to
be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed. Obviously
many modifications and variations are possible in view of the above teachings. The
embodiments are shown and described in order to best explain the principles of the
invention and its practical applications, to thereby enable others skilled in the
art to best utilize the invention and various embodiments with various modifications
as are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of
the invention be defined by the following claims and their equivalents:
1. A method for fabricating a nanoscale/microscale interface, the method comprising:
providing a substrate (702) with a surface having regularly patterned conductive pins;
fabricating, by nanoimprinting, a first nanoscale sub-layer (718, 719, 720) above
the substrate composed of a regular pattern of pad-interconnected nanowire units with
pads other pad-interconnected nanowire units overlying pins of the substrate; and
fabricating, by nanoimprinting, a second nanoscale sub-layer (Figure 7R) above the
first nanoscale sub-layer with pads of the pad-interconnected nanowire units overlying
pins of the substrate;
wherein the method, following fabricating, by nanoimprinting, a first nanoscale sub-layer
above the substrate, further includes:
fabricating vias (734) of conductive material above selected conductive pins of the
substrate (702) by a second nanoimprint step; and
applying a dielectric material to produce a planar surface with exposed pad-interconnected
nanowire units and vias (738).
2. The method of claim 1
wherein fabricating, by nanoimprinting, a first nanoscale sub-layer above the substrate
further includes
depositing a layer of nanoimprint resist (708),
imprinting nanoscale basins and troughs (710, 711, 712) within the nanoimprint resist,
applying a conductive material (716) to fill the nanoscale basins and troughs, and
removing the nanoimprint resist and undesired conductive material (Figure 7F) to leave
nanoscale features occupying the volumes of the nanoscale basins and troughs;
wherein imprinting nanoscale basins and troughs within the nanoimprint resist further
includes
imprinting the nanoimprint resist (708) using a nanoimprint stamp to form the basins
and troughs, and
etching nanoimprint resist from the floor of the basins and troughs; and
wherein removing the nanoimprint resist and undesired conductive material comprises
a liftoff step in which the remaining nanoimprint resist and overlying conductive
material are removed together.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein fabricating, by nanoimprinting, a second nanoscale sub-layer
above the first nanoscale sub-layer with pads of the pad-interconnected nanowire units
overlying pins of the substrate further includes:
applying a nanowire-junction material (740);
applying a layer of titanium (742) above the nanowire-junction material;
fabricating pad-interconnected nanowire units of the second nanoscale sub-layer (Figure
7S); and
applying a second layer of dielectric (Figure 7T).
4. The method of claim 1 further including fabricating, by nanoimprinting, additional
nanoscale sub-layers above the second nanoscale sub-layer.
5. A nanoscale/microscale interface comprising:
a predominantly microscale layer (302, 308, Figure 4A) with a surface having regularly
patterned pins (304, 310); and
a predominantly nanoscale layer (306, 312, 314, 316, Figure 4D) comprising an ordered
arrangement of pad-interconnected nanowire units (307, 313), a first pad (306) of
a pad-interconnected nanowire unit (307) overlying a first pin (304) of the predominantly
microscale layer to electrically interconnect the first pin to a second pin (310)
through a pad-interconnected nanowire unit (313) overlying the second pin and connected
to the first pad-interconnected nanowire unit through a conductive nanowire junction
(318);
wherein the pins (304, 310) and the pads (306, 312) of the pad-interconnected nanowire
units have submicroscale or microscale dimensions; and
wherein each pad-interconnected nanowire unit (307, 313) comprises a pad (206) having
two opposite edges and two nanowires (208, 210) emanating from the pad (206), in opposite
directions along a respective one of the opposite edges.
6. The nanoscale/microscale interface of claim 5
wherein the predominantly nanoscale layer includes a first sub-layer containing pad-interconnected
nanowire units (307, 313) arranged to center the pads on parallel row lines (402)
at a fixed repeat distance, with each pad-interconnected nanowire unit rotated by
a fixed angle Θ (406) with respect to the row line; and
wherein the nanowires (208, 210) of the pad-interconnected nanowire units (307, 313)
centered on a row line form parallel, closely spaced bundles of nanowires.
7. The nanoscale/microscale interface of claim 6
wherein the predominantly nanoscale layer includes a second sub-layer containing pad-interconnected
nanowire units (307, 313) arranged to center the pads on parallel row lines (404)
at a fixed repeat distance, with each pad-interconnected nanowire unit rotated by
a fixed angle Θ (406) with respect to the row line, the row lines of the second sub-layer
oriented approximately orthogonally to the row lines of the first sub-layer;
wherein pads of pad-interconnected nanowire units of the first and second sub-layers
overlie pins (304, 310) of the predominately microscale layer, with pads of pad-interconnected
nanowire units of the first sub-layer arranged to form grid points of the first rectilinear
grid and pads of pad-interconnected nanowire units of the second sub-layer arranged
to form grid points of a second rectilinear grid offset from the first rectilinear
grid so that each pad of pad-interconnected nanowire units of the second sub-layer
are positioned at the center of the first rectilinear-grid cell; and
wherein nanowire junctions (318) at intersections between first sub-layer and second
sub-layer pad-interconnected nanowire units are selectively configured to interconnect
pairs of pins.
8. An integrated circuit comprising the nanoscale/microscale interface of claim 6 with
additional microscale or submicroscale logic elements and functional components within
the predominantly microscale layer (302, 308, Figure 4A).